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Tal Streeter, Art and Kites
George Webster and John Dobson
The late Tal Streeter was one of an early group of kite artists who emerged in the West from the late 1960’s
onwards. His recent death set me thinking not only about his unique contribution but also about what we
mean by ‘kite artist’.
For a long time, Western kitemakers had been primarily interested in efficiency of design, quality of
construction and aerodynamic characteristics, with decoration being considered important, but not quite as
important as the more technical aspects. It was an engineering view of a kite.
The earliest Western kite festival based on the concept of the kite as art that we have discovered was an
annual event at the Bauhaus (then located in Weimar) in the early 1920’s, when it held a kite festival in
October each year. The kites were apparently makeshift but decorated in a childlike (not childish!) version of
the Bauhaus style. According to the later recollections of Felix Klee (son of Paul, who was then teaching at
the Bauhaus) who would have been 13 in 1921, “after making the kites, we went to one of the nearby hills,
where we flew the abstract constructions in the autumn wind, to the astonishment of the local populace”.
There are photographs of the kite procession and of the kites on the ground of the hill, but we can find no
picture of them actually being flown.
But it was Tal Streeter’s influential book The Art of the Japanese Kite (1974) that brought to the attention of
the kiteflying community the Japanese concept of the kite as a work of art, not of engineering, though we
know that there was an exhibition of Japanese paper kites in Stuttgart in 1914. So beginning in the 1980’s, a
number of Western artists began to be interested in the idea that the sky, or more generally space, could be a
place for artistic endeavour. The earliest reference we can trace is the set of Conferences on Culture in Space
arranged by the MIT Centre for Advanced Visual Studies (1981-6), which resulted in the Sky Artist Manifesto
being signed by over one hundred sky artists in 1986. (Ever since the Futurist Manifesto of 1909, any self-
respecting art movement dates its foundation from the date of its manifesto. The artistic manifesto has
become a literary art form in its own right, and there is at least one scholarly book devoted to the study of
this literary genre.) Two sentences extracted from the Sky Art Manifesto (reprinted in Tal Streeter’s book The
Philosopher’s Kite (2002)) will give the idea:
“From the ancient past, artists have formed images and dreams, fired the imagination, built structures of aspiration to give the world wings to fly, and the vision to see new societies in the sky. We use their cumulative light. “Our reach into space constitutes an infinite extension of human life, imagination and creativity.”
This manifesto, when taken together with the Japanese tradition of the art kite, suggests that there are two
main groups of sky artists. Of course there is a spectrum between them. We will just give what we consider
the opposite ends of the spectrum, recognising that there is a wide range of possible positions between them.
Firstly, there are those who see kites as a means of providing an artistic experience when the kite flies. It is
the utilisation of the sky as a canvas or medium of presentation of the artist’s statement or vision, expressed
in the form of a kite or other sky-inhabiting object. To put his point of view a bit dogmatically (manifesto
style) with specific reference to kite art, a sky art that is a work of art when it is not flying is not a sky art.
Three early artists in this field (Curt Asker, Jackie Matisse and Tal Streeter) collaborated in making a
wonderful book, Art That Flies (1991), in which this point of view is clearly expressed. From it we learn that
Curt Askew tried to draw on the sky using the kite like a watercolour stain on white/blue paper; that Jackie
Matisse sees her sky and underwater kites as the same thing expressed in different media; and that Tal
Streeter considered his five mile long Red Line kite as an extension of his tall Endless Column sculpture, which
was a rectangular steel tube painted red carrying the eye up its zigzag length seventy feet into the sky and
beyond.
Later, they produced in collaboration with Istvan Bodoczky, Michel Gressier, Falko Hasse and José Maria
Yturralde the Art Volant Kite Manifesto (1995):
The primary, simple kite is a vehicle, which speaks of joining of the spirit and the physical. Kites, then, are tools, mediums of expression in space, meditations on space; structures and surfaces, colors and forms interacting…visual, aural, tactile. The kite’s flying line connects the human hand and mind with the elements. Kites offer artists unparalleled opportunities for play, to explore, to experiment, manipulating scale and distance, making an immense space visible, unlocking the imagination. We seven artists continue our work in this medium and encourage the development and support of Art Volant.
The second group of sky artists are those who use a kite as the vehicle for putting their painting into the sky
rather than hanging it in a gallery. Claudio Capelli is a famous example. His famous kite festival at Cervia in
addition to the usual events does also display kites as an art exhibition in the traditional sense. There are of
course many artists following this idea. To name but a few: George Peters is a professional artist whose kites
feature superb high craftsmanship. Steve Brockett (brilliantly brought to the skies by Hugh and Lynn
Blowers) is a unique artist who uses his skill to produce novel kite designs as well as painted surfaces to
express his vision. Robert Trepannier is another artist with a unique point of view, as are Michael Goddard
and Joel Thézé. A very good book on the subject is the French Cerfs Volants: L’Art en Ciel by E. and M.
Domage (1996).
I remember the vicious comments which resulted from an attempt to set up an ‘artistic kite group’ in the
Kiteflier [George — which year?]. There was much mirth when it was suggested that an artistic kite did not
need to fly. (Have these people never heard of ‘conceptual art’? Tal Streeter’s five mile long kite has never
flown in its entirety either.) But we didn’t know then that the most expensive wau bulan kites are non-fliers;
indeed they use frames selected out from others at construction just because they are poor fliers. And the
barriletes gigantes of Guatemala are not flown either.
There have been several examples of the ‘Air Gallery’ approach where a variety of artists paint the skins of
a standard format kite. The best known example in England is the European Air Gallery now maintained and
occasionally flown by the North East Kite Fliers, which was developed from the Dutch Air Gallery. The
most ambitious example in terms of resourcing and quality of artists involved is the Art Kite Project — never
shown in the UK but well documented in Pictures for the Sky edited by P. Eubel (1992). Eubel invited over one
hundred artists worldwide to produce painting on washi paper in the form of one of seven Japanese kite
types (though they could also try their own designs). The skins were then made up by Japanese experts and
flown and shown at exhibitions around the world.
We don’t know anyone who actually saw it but the book shows some of the best kites we have ever seen.
Some of the illustrations show surreal contrasts of modern art against Japanese castles. The kite makers were
not necessarily just building the platform; in some cases they had to adapt their traditional construction to fit
the artist. It is amusing to note that that the organisers wrote that one of the novel aspects of the format
which attracted some artists was the element of danger (wind, paper and bamboo).
There are two questions in considering who is a kite artist and what is an artistic kite. Firstly, can there be
more than one example of a particular artistic kite? For us, the answer is clearly yes. There has long been a
tradition of artists making a number of distinct copies of their paintings, often with noticeable changes (El
Greco springs to mind as an example); and the concept of a limited print run is widely used — though a
longer run will decrease monetary worth of a particular instance. Secondly, what is the artistic worth of a kite
whose skin reproduces an image which was originally a painting or a photo. We don’t know. But the status of
a brilliantly faithful, or adapted, reproduction of a Japanese design into appliqué ripstop must be high —
we’re thinking of Jan Gutterink, Ruud Kugel and Baz Vreeswijk. The same is true of a good literary
translation of a writing.
There is also a third identifiable type of kite artist. Kitemakers such as Cotteceau, Uguen and Bodoczky all
produce kites with a common theme of frailty and modest size. Many of their kites are desired as decorations
even though all are designed to fly. Some of these artists emphasise the use of natural materials.
Back to Tal who started off these thoughts. He was a sculptor whose work was exhibited in prestigious
galleries in the USA and Korea — probably he most famous artist who used his talent in the world of kites,
though his most famous work of the 1960’s, Endless Column which we mentioned earlier, was a seventy foot
high zigzag of painted steel. Nothing could be physically further from a kite but Tal’s intention was that your
eye would be drawn faster and faster to the top and then jump off into the sky. What appealed to him were
simple shapes that you viewed against an ever-changing sky.
Tal lived in Japan during 1971/2. There he learnt to make kites from the local materials of paper and
bamboo — but in the simple style we associate with Japanese domestic design rather than the hectic
colourful designs of traditional Japanese kites. He was so involved that he amused the Japanese who invented
the phrase tako kichi or ‘Kite Crazy’ to describe him.
He made kites on his return from Japan, most famously by designing the Five Mile Red Line made by Doug
Hagemann which was a 350 sq.ft. parafoil with a very long tail. We think it was flown around 1989. (Does
anyone know its current whereabouts?) For Tal it was about simple shapes and a presence in the sky. Later he
made kites referring back to the Endless Column.
Uniquely among kitemakers, however, his greatest contribution to our art was his writings. He was, in our
view, the finest writer as a stylist in addition to what he had to say. His Art of the Japanese Kite (1974) opened
Western eyes to the qualities of Japanese kites – published before Pelham (1976). As it happened, he wrote at
the low point for traditional Japanese kitemaking as in response to the outcome of the war, Japan was moving
away from its native ethnic culture and adopting the culture of the victors — just as it had done before after
losing a war to China in the 7th century. Fortunately, Japanese kitemakers did start to flourish again using a
wide range of traditional styles.
Apart from his collaboration with Askers and Matisse previously mentioned, Tal wrote two further books.
A Kite Journey through India (1996) was again beautifully written with lovely personal touches but it has been
superseded by later writers and by the great changes in Indian kitemaking. The Philosopher’s Kite (2002) is really
an incomplete collection of his thoughts and travels — his response to requests for the book that others
wanted him to write. Look at it for the photos of his sculptures and the material on the origin of kites. It also
has a useful but now dated bibliography.
Then there were some books that Tal didn’t write. You will find reference to The Sky Begins at our Feet and In
Search of Gentle Beauty: Great Kites of the Western World.
Tal came to Sunderland Kite Festival and fell in love with Teesdale. He would have liked his collection of
oriental art kites to be located here as he couldn’t stand what he called ‘Bush’s America’. This idea was briefly
investigated but proved infeasible for a number of reasons.
Tal was always fundamentally a sculptor. He was attracted to ‘the idea of a piece of string hanging down, a
scrap of paper and sticks at one end and a hand at the other’ … ‘these modest materials began to tell me
something about sculpture in steel’. The connection between hand and sky was important to him and I would
guess The Five Mile Line was his only kite which flew from an anchor.
Kites as Art? He once wrote ‘Kites are unique and can’t be categorized, like bamboo which is neither tree
nor grass but just bamboo’.
Tal was a man of great taste – except for bacon.
George: This is the local butcher’s best cut bacon. How do you like it?
Tal: Well done please.
G. (five minutes after frying his own): OK?
T.: A bit crisper please.
G. (looking at a very dry wrinkled bit): OK?
T.: nearly OK – just another minute.
He applies the American test. Press rasher on plate. Press with flat of knife. If it all crumbles then it is done.
For a copiously illustrated version of this article, see John Dobson’s website [link goes in here].